5 SEO Principles Smart Brands Need To Follow

Every brand is unique, which means every SEO strat­e­gy is unique. But these five over­ar­ch­ing prin­ci­ples will help guide your SEO plans.

Dave Davies By Dave Davies from Beanstalk Internet Marketing. Join the discussion » 0 comments

SEO in 2015 is com­plex. Opti­miz­ing for your audi­ence is a crit­i­cal first step of a suc­cess­ful SEO strat­e­gy, one that ensures peo­ple will find your brand or busi­ness on search engines and increas­es your over­all online vis­i­bil­i­ty. It’s also impor­tant to keep in mind and fol­low these five core SEO prin­ci­ples.


1. Every Brand, Website & SEO Strategy Is Unique

Of all the core prin­ci­ples this arti­cle will dis­cuss, this one is arguably the most impor­tant to grasp. Under­stand­ing this will save you end­less headaches and sor­rows.

If you believe all sites can be opti­mized based on the same set of rules, you will fail.

Wikipedia isn’t Buz­zFeed. Each site has dif­fer­ent tar­get audi­ences, objec­tives, con­tent types, user expe­ri­ences, and so on.

Where does this con­fu­sion come from? The fol­low­ing two ideas may seem to be in con­flict, but actu­al­ly, once you ful­ly under­stand they exist togeth­er, it cre­ates a per­fect envi­ron­ment to devel­op a smart SEO strat­e­gy:

  1. Search engines oper­ate on an algo­rithm and that algo­rithm is the same for all sites.
  2. Each site is unique and must be opti­mized around its own unique fea­tures.

Think­ing these two ideas can­not exist togeth­er is akin to say­ing that the laws of our nation apply the same to all, so all peo­ple must be exact­ly the same for the sys­tem to work. Since we have a wide range of unique indi­vid­u­als, from Stephen Hawk­ing (Wikipedia) to Kim Kar­dashi­an (Buz­zFeed), we know this isn’t the case.

The key here is to know that the algo­rithm is unbend­ing and uni­ver­sal, and your web­site is an indi­vid­ual with unique skills and abil­i­ties. You must think about ways you can max­i­mize your site’s pop­u­lar­i­ty with­in the con­text of the law (the search algo­rithm).

2. Content Is Critical

You need to view the con­tent of your site from two, often sep­a­rate, organ­ic search func­tions: con­tent that ranks and con­tent that earns links.

For exam­ple, let’s say you sell down­hill moun­tain bike equip­ment. Even the most avid down­hill bik­er isn’t like­ly to link to or social­ly share a page about a new shock.

And if a con­sumer did want to share that info, it would like­ly be a page on the man­u­fac­tur­er’s web­site, not a site sell­ing the shock. What might a con­sumer link to? Maybe some con­tent that explains how to get more air off a jump, or per­haps even how to select a shock. The lat­ter exam­ple hits both types of con­tent in one sce­nario.

When it comes to the con­tent we want to rank, it will be the prod­uct pages. But when it comes to con­tent to acquire links, we need to include infor­ma­tion­al pages.

Essen­tial­ly, you need to build good, sol­id resources on your site to attract links from relat­ed sites to make your site strong enough that you’ll rank for the con­ver­sion phras­es.

3. Technical SEO Matters

If you want search engines to rank your site, then you need that site to be in a for­mat they can eas­i­ly nav­i­gate and under­stand. You must fol­low all the search engine guide­lines and take advan­tage of all the capa­bil­i­ties.

Your site must:

  • Be built prop­er­ly.
  • Load quick­ly.
  • Pri­or­i­tize con­tent.
  • Address more tech­ni­cal con­sid­er­a­tions (e.g. serv­ing the site in HTTPS and includ­ing markup).

While these alone gen­er­al­ly aren’t mag­ic bul­lets to the top, they can make all the dif­fer­ence in tight com­pe­ti­tions.

SEO is as much about elim­i­nat­ing poten­tial issues as it is about cre­at­ing advan­tages. When the tech­ni­cal issues are addressed they no longer have to remain on the radar as poten­tial caus­es of rank­ing drops. This allows you to focus in on what remains.

Tech­ni­cal SEO isn’t as sexy as A/B test­ing or adding new con­tent because you’ll bare­ly notice any onsite changes or pos­i­tive effects. But when done right, tech­ni­cal SEO elim­i­nates so many poten­tial issues that could pre­vent con­sumers from dis­cov­er­ing you. This is invalu­able.

4. Your Website Need Links

Links are still good for your web­site. Why?

  • Links increase the vis­i­bil­i­ty of your site.
  • Links are used as a sig­nal by search engines to deter­mine the strength of your site.
  • Google has inter­nal­ly run tests on their algo­rithm with­out links and it pro­duces infe­ri­or results.
  • Unlike in years past, you can’t rely on spam (i.e., self-cre­at­ed or paid) links to achieve any long-term suc­cess. Now you actu­al­ly have to use your brain.

Link build­ing now requires finesse and an under­stand­ing of social media, con­tent devel­op­ment, research and ana­lyt­ics, and PR, among many oth­er hats.

But rest assured, if you want to rank you need to be con­stant­ly aware of what you’re offer­ing on your site. Make sure you’re offer­ing con­tent that oth­ers want to link to and ref­er­ence social­ly, even if it isn’t the con­tent that makes you much (if any) mon­ey.

5. Everything Is A Process Of Elimination

There are lit­er­al­ly hun­dreds of var­i­ous sig­nals used to influ­ence search rank­ings. No one knows them all (prob­a­bly not even the folks at Google at this stage).

Fur­ther, the weight­ing of these sig­nals changes con­stant­ly. You have to elim­i­nate all pos­si­ble prob­lems and one-by-one deploy every pos­si­ble advan­tage.

Will this result in wast­ed ener­gies? Yes. Some issues are dif­fi­cult to address and don’t promise a high return.

Nonethe­less, poten­tial issues need to be elim­i­nat­ed (or at min­i­mum made note of so every­one is aware of the poten­tial prob­lem). Why?

What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You

Let’s say, for exam­ple, your site hasn’t addressed its site speed. Sud­den­ly, you find your­self fail­ing to make any head­way up Page 1 for your main key­words.

Is it a site speed issue? Maybe, maybe not. Until you address the issue, you’ll nev­er know. But then you’ll have to play the wait­ing game to deter­mine results at a time when it’s poten­tial­ly cost­ing you rev­enue.

Giv­en this sce­nario there are two pos­si­ble out­comes:

  • Site speed is the issue: Had it been addressed ear­li­er, the site would have been rank­ing high­er ear­li­er and mak­ing mon­ey faster.
  • Site speed isn’t the issue: Had you addressed this ear­li­er, you would’ve known site speed was­n’t hold­ing the site back and you could have diag­nosed oth­er pos­si­ble issues.

Known Unknowns And Unknown Unknowns

Just because some­thing doesn’t mat­ter today doesn’t mean it won’t mat­ter tomor­row.

Let’s take mobile as the exam­ple here. We’ve known that Google has been push­ing brands and busi­ness­es to think more about the mobile user expe­ri­ence.

What if you had a site that, while not mobile-friend­ly, didn’t pro­vide a hor­ri­ble expe­ri­ence for mobile users, so you didn’t both­er fix­ing what didn’t seem worth the cost?

Well now you’re fac­ing a real sce­nario where a new mobile search index is being launched on April 21 specif­i­cal­ly for mobile. While we haven’t seen it yet, it’s like­ly that non-mobile sites will essen­tial­ly be invis­i­ble to searchers.

So if the bad expe­ri­ence of your mobile site has­n’t been addressed, now you’re faced with a sce­nario where you won’t rank on mobile at all and you’ll be try­ing to find a solu­tion at the same time as every­one else who also was pre­pared for the unknown.

What Can You Do Now?

What you need to do is list off every­thing that either is or may be a prob­lem, pri­or­i­tize them, and address them in a log­i­cal and coor­di­nat­ed way. To be sure, you’ll like­ly nev­er get to the end and if you do it’s sim­ply time to make a new list.

If, mag­i­cal­ly, you get to the end and have noth­ing left, look back to Prin­ci­ple 4 and think again about what types of links you don’t have or which of the ones you do might cause an issue and look to address­ing that.

Dave Davies

Written by Dave Davies

CEO, Beanstalk Internet Marketing

Dave Davies is the CEO of Beanstalk Internet Marketing. He writes with 15 years of experience in SEO and Internet marketing.

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